Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Letter #5, Post #7

Tuesday 31 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Mr. Richard Harvey is going to be married; but as it is a great secret, & only known to half the Neighborhood, you must not mention it. The Lady's name is Musgrove.-" - Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796



Musgrove, hum, where have I heard that name before? Ah, yes, Persuasion; the amiable Musgroves.

For information about Mr. Richard Harvey see Letter #5, Post #5.

Jane Austen's wit is so timeless and quotable, "but as it is a great secret, & only known to half the Neighborhood, you must not mention it."

I think I should start a quote page.

I hope you had a great day!
Terrie

Monday, January 30, 2012

Letter #5, Post #6

Sunday 29 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Henry went away on friday as he purposed without fayl-; You will hear from him soon I imagine, as he talked of writing to Steventon shortly." - Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796



Henry-Thomas Austen, the fourth child born to George and Cassandra Leigh Austen on 8 June 1771.

You have to love Henry. He was obviously smart; he was a scholar and Fellow of St. John's College, Oxford by the time he was nineteen and had a Master's degree by twenty-five.

He was not afraid to try different things, or schemes, he started as a Lieutenant in the Oxfordshire Militia in 1793 and became Captain and Adjutant in 1797; he was an army agent and banker from 1801, the Receiver-General for Oxfordshire 1813; went bankrupt in 1816; took Holy Orders and became curate of Chawton 1816, chaplain to the British Embassy in Berlin 1818; Domestic Chaplain to HRH the Duke of Cumberland and also Domestic Chaplain to the Earl of Morley 1820; rector of Steventon 1820-1822; curate of Farnham in Surrey 1822 to 1827 and Master of the Grammer School there from 1823 to 1827; he was perpetual curate of Bentley, Hants 1824 to 1839. He then lived in Colchester, Essex and Tunbridge Wells.

He won fair cousin Eliza de Feuillide's hand when older brother James could not. They were married 31 December 1797. She passed away 25 April 1813. Henry buried her with her mother and her son from her first marriage in Hampstead, NW.

His second marriage was to Eleanor Jackson on 11 April 1820. Sadly, he had no children by either marriage.

Henry was instrumental in getting Jane's novels published and was the first to provide biographical information about her in the form of the introduction in the front of Northanger Abby and Persuasion.

It is said Henry was Jane's favorite brother.

He died 12 March 1850 and is buried at Tunbridge Wells at the age of seventy-seven.

I hope you had a great day!
Terrie

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Letter #5, Post #5

Saturday 28 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "We have just got some venison from Godmersham, which the two Mr Harveys are to devour tomorrow; and on friday or Saturday the Goodnestone people are to finish their Scraps." - Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796

The word 'tomorrow' was superscripted over 'on Thursday', which was cancelled.

So, the Mr. Harvey's were coming to dinner on Tuesday, Mr. Richard Harvey and his son, Mr. Richard Harvey, jr. Mr. Richard Harvey, jr. was curate of Littlebourne, Kent at this time.

The 13th century church in Littlebourne is St. Vincent. This is a beautiful video made while the church was being prepared for a wedding.

                                          St. Vincent in Littlebourne, Kent, England

It seems as though Edward and Fanny were very kind and hospitable people. They were close to their families and the people around them, very sweet.

I hope you have a great day!
Terrie

Friday, January 27, 2012

Letter #5, Post #4

Friday 27 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Farmer Clarinbould died this morning, & I fancy Edward means to get some of his farm if he can cheat Sir Brook enough in the agrement.-" Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796

Oops, she forgot, How sad for Mrs. Clarinbould!
Sir Brook would have been Sir Brook-William Bridges, 4th Baronet of Goodnestone Park. He was Edward's brother-in-law.

John Claringbould was buried 11 September 1796.


This is the Devis view of Goodnestone Park after the natural landscaping during the 1770's. Goodnestone Park is open to the public to view the gardens. What a great way to spend an afternoon.

Information about Goodnestone Park:
http://www.goodnestoneparkgardens.co.uk/history-of-goodnestone.php

Have a great day!
Terrie

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Letter #5, Post #3

Thursday 26 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "To-day the Goodnestone Party begins to disperse & spread itself abroad. Mr & Mrs Cage & George repair to Hythe. Lady Waltham, Miss Bridges & Miss Mary Finch to Dover, for the health of the two former.-I have never seen Marianne at all.-
     "On Thursday Mr & Mrs Bridges return to Danbury; Miss Harriot Hales accompanies them to London in her way to Dorsetshire." - Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796

Here is a link to a map of the ports of Hythe.
http://www.hythe-kent.com/Hythe%20Group/cinque1.htm

Lady Waltham was a very good friend of Lady Bridges. This is a link to a copy of an old account book in the handwriting of Lady Bridges in which she mentions Lady Waltham. This is such interesting information concerning their wardrobes, what was needed for a lady to marry.
http://www.pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablt20.html#letter111

Marianne Bridges was born in 1774 and died 12 April 1811. She was an invalid from an early age. She died unmarried.

Mr. and Mrs. Bridges would be Revd. Brook-Henry Bridges who was the rector of Danbury and Woodham Ferrers and Jane Hales Bridges. Miss Harriot Hales would have been Jane Hales Bridges' sister.


I hope you had a good day,
Terrie

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Letter #5, Post #2

Wednesday 25 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "We were at a Ball on Saturday I assure you. We dined at Goodnestone & in the evening danced two Country Dances & the Boulangeries.- I opened the ball with Edward Bridges; the other couples, were Lewis Cage and Harriot, Frank and Louisa, Fanny & George. Eliz:th played one Country dance, Lady Bridges the other, which She made Henry dance with her; and Miss Finch played the Boulangeries-On reading over the last three or four Lines, I am aware of my having expressed myself in so doubtful a manner that if I did not tell you to the contrary, You might imagine it was Lady Bridges who made Henry dance with her, at the same time that she was playing-which if not impossible must appear a very improbable Event to you.-But it was Eliz: who danced--. [p.2] We supped there, & walked home at night under the shade of two Umbrellas.-" - Jane  Austen, Monday 5 September 1796

                                          Goodnestone Park House. That is me waving from the open window. I can wish, can't I?


How could I resist? Becoming Jane at the ball!

The Bridges, baronets of Goodnestone Park. These Bridges were Edward Austen Knight's in-laws.

The partners of the first dance were:
Jane Austen and Edward Bridges ( born 1779), Lewis Cage, Fanny Bridges Cage's husband. They married in 1791. Frank Austen and Louisa Bridges (born 1777). Fanny Bridges Cage (born 1771) and George Bridges (born 1784).

Also mentioned are Elizabeth Bridges Austen, Edward Austen Knight's wife, Lady Bridges: Fanny Fowler Bridges who was married to Sir Brook Bridges, 3rd Baronet. Sir Brook had passed away in 1791, but Lady Bridges was still at Goodnestone Park. And Miss Finch, probably Mary Finch of Eastwell Park near Ashford, Kent. She is mentioned in the next sentence or two.

The dance, the Boulangeries, or La Boulangere a des ecus, "a mildly improper French popular song", which means The Baker's Wife Has Plenty of Money. The question is, why does the baker's wife have plenty of money?

This is a French group preforming the Boulangere. I love the red hat!

And then they supped and walked home at night under the shade of two umbrellas!!

What a way to spend an evening!

I hope you had a great day!
Terrie

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Letter #5, Post #1

Tuesday 24 January 2012
Monday 5 September 1796
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "My dear Cassandra
"I shall be extremely anxious to hear the Event of your Ball, & shall hope to receive so long & minute an account of every particular that I shall be tired of reading it. Let me know how many besides their four-teen Selves & Mr & Mrs Wright, Michael will contrive to place about their Coach, and how many of the Gentlemen, Musicians & Waiters, he will have persuaded to come in their Shooting Jackets. I hope John Lovett's accident will not prevent his attending the Ball, as you will otherwise be obliged to dance with Mr Tincton the whole Evening. Let me know how J. Harwood deports himself without the Miss Biggs;- and which of the Marys will carry the day with my Brother James." - Jane Austen, Monday 5 September 1796

This is the beginning of letter number five. There is possibly a letter missing between letter number four and five.

Deirdre Le Faye says Michael is probably Michael Terry of the Dummer family. He was born in 1775, so he was the same age as Jane Austen. He would have been at St John's College, Cambridge in 1796. He was rector of Dummer from 1811 to 1848. And interestingly, he was engaged to Anna Austen in the winter of 1809-1810.

                                              All Saint's Church in Dummer, Hants.
                                                               All Saint's Church in Dummer, Hants.

This is a link to a page by the Hampshire County Councel. Their site lists interesting pages about many of the places Jane Austen mentions in her letters.

http://www3.hants.gov.uk/index/your-area/localpages/north-east/basingstoke.htm

The Harwood family at this time owned Deane. Deane is where Jane Austen's family lived before moving to Steventon. The Miss Biggs were friends of Jane and Cassandras. They were Harris Bigg-Wither's sisters, Elizabeth, Catherine and Althea.

Mr. and Mrs. Wright: Revd Robert Wright (born in 1772) and his wife, Elizabeth. He became curate of Dummer in 1797. Michael Terry must have taken over for him when Mr. Wright became rector of Ovington, Hants.

Mr. and Mrs. Wright's son, Robert-John-William, was born at Dummer in 1803. He became curate to his father at Ovington in 1826.

                                          St. Peter's in Ovington, Hants. I love these old churches.


I will refer you again to the book by Constance Hill, Jane Austen, Her Homes and Her Friends. In chapters six and seven she discusses some of the very people who have been mentioned here. This book is very entertaining. Constance Hill and her sister, Ellen Hill embarked on the trip of a Janeite's lifetime. Back in 1900, I think, the preface was written in 1901, so maybe 1899, they went to all of the places Jane Austen would have went to and wrote about what they found. I think it is well worth your time if you are interested in Jane Austen and you can read it online.

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/hill/austen/homes.html

Okay, back to the subject. I cannot find anything about Mr. Tincton, perhaps, this was a private joke.

The Mary's would have been Mary Lloyd and Mary Harrison. Mary Lloyd won. She and James were married 17 January 1797, just a few months later.

I hope you have a great day,
Terrie

Monday, January 23, 2012

Letter #4

Monday 23 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I know nothing of my mother's handkerchief, but I dare say I shall find it soon.
 I am very affectionately yours,
Jane
Miss Austen,
Steventon,
Overton,
Hants." - Jane Austen - Thursday 1 September 1796

So, we finished letter number four today. We have covered so many topics and it has been fun.

Have you seen Midnight In Paris? I watched it with my daughters and enjoyed it very much. It is a romantic comedy with a great cast of actors and characters. You might like to check it out. This is a link to the trailer on Youtube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atLg2wQQxvU



I hope you had a good day.
I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie


Sunday, January 22, 2012

Letter #4

Sunday 22 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I am glad to hear so good an account of Mr Limprey and J. Lovett." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Deirdre Le Faye says, "Limbrey, Mr (Not 'Limprey' as JA wrote.) Probably Mr John Limbrey of Hoddington House, Upton Grey, Hants; or possibly a member of the Limbrey-Sclater family, who lived at Tangier Park, near Manydown, during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries."

Mr. John Limbrey is associated with Hoddington House, Upton Grey, Hants and Tangier Park, near Manydown during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Limbrey's also have an association with the Mathews. Anne Mathew was James Austen's first wife.

Hoddington House is listed for sale. Here is a link to see this beautiful estate and information about it. If you have an extra 20,000,000 pounds silver you might check into it.

http://www.william-montgomery.com/properties/hoddington.htm

                                                               Hoddington House

 This picture is looking into Tangier Park. It is the best I could find. If you squint you can see a building.

Harris Bigg-Wither, the man who proposed marriage to Jane Austen, moved from Manydown into the adjacent Tangier Park in 1831, two years before he died. His son, Lovelace, inherited Manydown and later bought Tangier Park.

 The only thing I can find of J. Lovett, Mr. John Lovett, esq., of Overton, Hants, is a listing for an obituary stating he died at Lambeth in his 82nd year. He was "late of Polhampton-Lodge, Overton, Hants."

Polhampton-Lodge is now a stud stable.

                                          Polhampton Stud Stables, picture by Colin Bates
Below is a link the site said I had to include to use this picture, so, I did.

Polhampton Stud Stables (Colin Bates) / CC BY-SA 2.0


I hope you had a great day!
Downton Abby tonight!!
I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Letter #4

Saturday 21 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, " They say that there are a prodigious number of birds here-abouts this year, so that perhaps I may kill a few." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

You can hear the teasing in this line, probably from Edward and Frank. She was lucky to have grown up in a close, amiable family.


                                                   Current day Goodnestone, Rowling, Kent

Enjoy your day today!
I am  very affectionately yours,
Terrie

Friday, January 20, 2012

Letter #4

Friday 20 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "We are very busy making Edward's shirts, and I am proud to say that I am the neatest worker of the party." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

I seems that Jane Austen enjoyed sewing and she was good at it. She mentioned sewing a great deal throughout her letters and in her books. This is a quilt Jane, Cassandra and their mother made. It is on display at the Jane Austen's House Museum.


And this is a needlecase Jane made for one of her nieces and a link to the Jane Austen Centre in Bath that has instructions on how to make one.



Enjoy your day!
I am very affectionately yours, 
Terrie

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Letter #4

Thursday 19 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I do not believe that any of the party were aware of the valuables they had left behind; nor can I hear anything of Anna's gloves. Indeed I have not enquired at all about them hitherto." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Anna was probably James' daughter, Jane Anna-Elizabeth, born in 1793. Her mother, Anne Mathew Austen, had passed away 3 May 1795. She spent quite a bit of time at Steventon Rectory after her mother's death.

I am glad to know that, even back then, people still lost things. I have an ongoing list of things I am looking for! I have discovered the surest way to find things is to purchase it again.

Mark Twain said, "Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most."

I hope you enjoy your day today!
I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Letter #4

Wednesday 18 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Frank has turned a very nice little butter-churn for Fanny." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Frank Austen, Jane Austen's brother, mentioned earlier in the letter and Fanny, Edward's wife. We discussed this subject earlier in the letter about wood turning. Frank must have been pretty good at it. It does not seem easy to make a butter-churn.

Perhaps it looked something like this.


The other day I was walking through the living room and my husband was watching a show on wood turning. I had never heard of wood turning before Jane Austen wrote about it in this letter. So, you see, I am learning from my hobby, or whatever you call this.

This is a link to Create TV and information about the show.

And the wood turners have their own organization with 14,000 members. Where have I been? I live in a desert, maybe if I lived around trees I might have heard of this before.


I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Letter #4

Saturday 14 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I have heard nothing of Mary Robinson since I have been [here]. I expect to be well scolded for daring to doubt, whenever the subject is mentioned." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Mary Darby Robinson was, by 1796, a writer. She had been, among many other things, an actress. Her story is tragic, but very interesting. Here is a link if you are curious. There is no need for me to rewrite what has already been written.

http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/robinson/biography.html#darby

What I found interesting was that as I was reading about Mary Robinson I was reminded of several situations in Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion. Such as, this quote from Mary Robinson's memoir, "Every event of my life has more or less been marked by the progressive evils of a too acute sensibility." - Mary Darby Robinson, The Memoirs of Mary Robinson, pg 8. The memoir's were published in 1801.

Isn't this the main point of Sense and Sensibility? Elinor has sense and Mary Ann has "a too acute sensibility". Perhaps Jane Austen wanted to present a comparison and an answer to the possible tragic outcome of a life lived with an unchecked acute sensibility.

Also, back in 1781 Mary Robinson agreed to be the seventeen-year-old prince's mistress for the tidy sum of 20,000 pounds, which, when their affair was over, he did not pay. She made a fuss, which ruined her reputation. She ended up with 5,000 pounds instead and in 1782 she obtained a further annuity for herself  of  500 pounds and a 200 pound annuity during the life of her daughter, Maria Elizabeth.

Do you remember the scene in Sense and Sensibility chapter two in which John Dashwood and his wife discuss what should be done about the promise to help the Dashwood girls:

"Certainly not; but if you observe, people always live for ever when there is an annuity to be paid them; and she is very stout and healthy, and hardly forty. An annuity is a very serious business; it comes over and over every year, and there is no getting rid of it. You are not aware of what you are doing. I have known a great deal of the trouble of annuities; for my mother was clogged with the payment of three to old superannuated servants by my father's will, and it is amazing how disagreeable she found it. Twice every year these annuities were to be paid; and then there was the trouble of getting it to them; and then one of them was said to have died, and afterwards it turned out to be no such thing. My mother was quite sick of it. Her income was not her own, she said, with such perpetual claims on it; and it was the more unkind in my father, because, otherwise, the money would have been entirely at my mother's disposal, without any restriction whatever. It has given me such an abhorrence of annuities, that I am sure I would not pin myself down to the payment of one for all the world."

Jane Austen put these words into the mouth of Mrs. John Dashwood, a ridiculous character. She, herself, received an annuity from several of her brothers.

In an article on the Chawton House Library page about Mary Darby Robinson, by Katherine Binhammer, she says, "She felt too much, while the men in her life felt not enough, and she emerges from her Memoirs as a triumphant yet tragic heroine. She blames these men for her sorrows – from her father's abandonment of the family to take up with his mistress, to her lover of fifteen years, Barnastre Tarleton's leaving her two years before her death for a younger wife – men cheat and women truly love, both in her life and in her writing." 


This is such a contrast to the sweet passage between Anne and Captain Harville in Persuasion, chapter XI, about who loves longer, men or women.


And then , Captain Wentworth's letter, "I can listen no longer in silence. I must speak to you by such means as are within my reach. You pierce by soul. I am half agony, half hope. Tell me not that I am too late, that such precious feelings are gone for ever. I offer myself to you again with a heart even more you own, than when yo almost broke it eight years and a half ago. Dare not say that man forgets sooner than woman, that his love has an earlier death. I have loved none but you. Unjust I may have been, weak and resentful I have been, but never inconstant. You alone have brought me to Bath. For you alone I think and plan.-Have you not seen this? Can you fail to have understood my wishes?-I had not waited even these ten days, could I have read your feelings, as I think you must have penetrated mine. I can hardly write. I am every instant hearing something which overpowers me. You sink your voice, but I can distinguish the tones of that voice, when they would be lost on others.-Too good, too excellent creature! You do us justice indeed. You do believe that there is true attachment  and constancy among men. Believe it to be most fervent, most undeviating in "F. W."
"I must go, uncertain of my fate; but I shall return hither, or follow your party, as soon as possible. A word, a look will b e enough to decide whether I enter your father's house this evening, or never."


Perhaps Miss Austen wanted to make a statement in contrast to the statement Mary Robinson made in her memoir.


                                                Mary Robinson as painted by Gainsborough

Mary Robinson as painted by John Hoppner

I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie



Friday, January 13, 2012

Downton Abby

Friday 13 January 2012
I have just discovered Downton Abby! I know I am late, but better late than never, right?

If you have not watched it I would say it is well worth your time. You can watch season one on Netflix Watch Me Now; just search for Downton Abby.

PBS has started season two on Sunday night's Masterpiece Theater.

If you have been watching, this is a link to a spoof by BBC Comic Relief Night on Youtube, very funny!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5dMlXentLw&feature=relmfu

Have a great day!!
Terrie

Letter #4

Friday 13 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I am glad to hear so good an account of Mr Charde, and only fear that my long absence may occasion his relapse. I practise every day as much as I can-I wish it were more for his sake." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Dr. George William Chard was Jane Austen's music teacher. He became the organist of Winchester Cathedral from 1802-1849 and Master of Music at Winchester College. He wrote numerous hymns and anthems. This is a link to information about a few of his songs.

http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=au%3AChard%2C+George+William%2C&qt=hot_author

Jane started pianoforte lessons when she was nine years old at the Abby School. She took lessons until she was twenty-one. Music was important to her. She included it in her novels. She hand copied a collection of her favorite music and neatly indexed it all. The original is a Chawton.

The Jane Austen Society of North America Alabama Region has a web site, "Austen Music Online". You might like to check this out.

http://bama.ua.edu/~jdonley/austen/index.html

!
Jane Austen's music books

There are two cd's available of the music from her library.




I hope you have a great day today!
I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie


Thursday, January 12, 2012

Letter #4

Thursday 12 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Lady Hales, with her two youngest daughters, have been to see us. Caroline is not grown at all coarser than she was, nor Harriet at all more delicate." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

The Hales family were baronets of Bekesbourne, Kent. Lady Kent's husband, Sir Thomas-Pym Hales was a 4th baronet. He died in 1773. Lady Hales died in 1803. Harriet and Caroline, who apparently had not changed since the last time Jane saw them, were both unmarried at this time. Harriet was born in 1770 and Caroline in 1772; so they were both a little older than Jane. Harriet never married. Caroline married Col. the Hon. William-John Gore in 1798.

The Hales family were related to Edward Austen Knight through Lady Hales' second eldest daughter, Jane Hales, who was born in 1766, and married Revd Brook-Henry Bridges in 1795. Revd Brook-Henry Bridges was Elizabeth Bridges Austen's brother. Elizabeth was married to Edward Austen Knight, Jane Austen's brother. Confusing? Yes, well, anyway...

Sir Thomas-Pym Hales was the fourth baronet and when he died the baronetcy passed to his brother, Sir Philip Hales, the fifth baronet.

According to The Beauties of England and Wales: or, Delineations..., Volume 8, Part 2, page 1096, Howletts in Bekesbourne was a former seat of the Hales family and was purchased of Sir Philip Hales by Isaac Bough, Esq, who rebuilt the mansion and sold it, along with 300 acres of land in 1799.

What is interesting is that Howletts is now Howletts Wild Animal Park. The mansion still stands on the location.

 Howletts house at Howletts Wild Animal Park in Bekebourne, Kent, England.

This is a link to information about the zoo.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howletts_Zoo

Interesting how things change, yet, stay the same.

I hope you have a great day!
I am very affectionately yours,
Terrie

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Letter #4

Wednesday 11 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Mr and Mrs Cage and Mr and Mrs Bridges dined with us yesterday. Fanny seemed as glad to see me as anybody, and enquired very much after you, whom she supposed to be making your wedding-clothes. She is as handsome as ever, and somewhat fatter. We had a very pleasant day, and some liqueurs in the evening. Louisa's figure is very much improved; she is as stout again as she was. Her face, from what I could see of it one evening, appeared not at all altered. She and the gentlemen walked up here on Monday night-she came in the morning with the Cages from Hythe." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Mr. and Mrs. Cage would have been Mr. Lewis Cage and Mrs. Fanny Cage, nee Bridges, (1771-May 1805) of Milgate, Bearsted, Kent. They married in 1791 and had two daughters, Fanny and Sophia. They were brother and sister-in-law to Edward Austen Knight.

It looks to me that Mr. and Mrs. Bridges would have to have been Revd Brook-Henry (1770-1855), rector of Woodham Ferrers and Danbury, Essex. He married Jane Hales in 1795. They had two sons and two daughters. Revd Brook-Henry would have been the only Bridges son married in 1796.

Louisa must have been Louisa Bridges, (1777-1856). She died unmarried.

This is a link to a gardening company's pictures of Milgate Park gardens.
http://www.specialistgardening.com/work-project-6.asp


Milgate House, Bearsted, Kent. I believe this house sold in 2008 for 1,690,000 pounds. It is just beautiful.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Letter #4

Monday 9 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "What a fine fellow Charles is, to deceive us into writing two letters to him at Cork! I admire his ingenuity extremely, especially as he is so great a gainer by it." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Charles-John Austen was the youngest of the Austen children, born 23 June 1779. He was at this time a midshipman on the HMS Unicorn captained by Captain Sir Thomas Williams, who was his cousin, Jane Copper's husband. They were stationed out of Cork, Ireland.


This is a wooden model of the Unicorn. It is available in a kit, yet, another hobby? The following is the link for it.

http://www.historicships.com/TALLSHIPS/Corel/HMS%20Unicorn%20SM11/HMS%20Unicorn%20SM11.htm

By the way, the Fleur-de-Lis shawl e-pattern from the Sensibility.com site is coming along nicely. I consider myself to be a very basic crocheter, but the pattern is very easy to understand. I am happy with so far. I will post a picture when I finish it.

Yours very affectionately,
Terrie

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Letter #4

Sunday 8 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "To-morrow I shall be just like Camilla in Mr Dubster's summer-house; for my Lionel will have taken away the ladder by which I came here, or at least by which I intended to get away, and here I must stay till his return. My situation, however, is somewhat preferable to hers, for I am very happy here, though I should be glad to get home by the end of the month. I have no idea that Miss Pearson will return with me." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Camilla is a reference to Frances Burney's book, Camilla, or a Picture of Youth, published in 1796. The scene she mentions here is in Book IV, chapters II-III. This book is now an ebook so you can read it on-line. Maybe a nice way to spend the afternoon? "Fancy a Jane day?" I could imagine Jane Austen spending the afternoon reading Camilla.

http://books.google.com/ebooks/reader?id=LR0GAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&pg=GBS.PP5

I believe Miss Pearson was Henry's bow at the time and she is mentioned several times later so we will get to her soon.

This is a pattern from the Sampler Girl. I love her patterns. She has an entire section devoted to patterns she has made just for Jane Austen fans. She is a Janeite also!

This is the link to her page if you would care to check it out.
http://www.thesamplergirl.com/catalog.php?item=392

I hope you enjoy your day!!!
Terrie

Friday, January 6, 2012

Letter #4

Friday 6 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I have told Fanny about the bead of her necklace, and she wants very much to know where you found it." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Fanny would be Frances-Catherine Austen, Edward's first child. She was born 23 January 1793, so she would have been about 2 years, nine months old in 1796. She married Sir Edward Knatchbull and had nine children. She died 24 December 1882 at Provender, Kent. Their eldest son, Edward (1829-1893), who became the first Lord Brabourne, edited the Letters of Jane Austen.



The Knatchbull, Lord Brabourne line continues still today. It turns out the current, eighth Lord Brabourne, is Prince William's godfather, pretty cool. The following are some interesting links.










Thursday, January 5, 2012

Letter #4

Thursday 5 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I have taken little George once in my arms since I have been here, which I thought very kind." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Little George was most likely George-Thomas Austen, Edward's third child and second son. He was born 22 November 1795, so he would have been just over nine months old at this writing. He would grow up to go to St John's College at Oxford and marry Lady Nelson. Sadly, they did not have any children. He died in 1867.

His cousin, Lord Brabourne, who edited the Letters of Jane Austen, in 1884, said this about him, "He was one of those men who are clever enough to do almost anything, but live to their lives' end very comfortably doing nothing." Well, if he was comfortable, he was probably happy in it, right?

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Letter #4

Wednesday 4 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "Our men had but indifferent weather for their visit to Godmersham, for it rained great part of the way there and all the way back. They found Mrs Knight remarkably well and in very good spirits. It is imagined that she will shortly be married again." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

Miss Austen was in a witty mood when she wrote this letter to Cassandra, was she not? Mrs. Knight was up in age and not even close to being married again.

I found some interesting information about Rowling and Godmersham at the British Listed Buildings web site with satellite views, very cool. These are beautiful estates!

http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-177937-rowling-house-goodnestone

This is where Jane Austen was visiting when she wrote this letter. Her brother Edward and his family lived here at the time.

http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-181548-godmersham-park-courtyards-walled-garden

This is Godmersham, home of Mrs. Knight, Edward Austen Knight's adopted mother. He would eventually inherit this estate.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Letter #4

Tuesday 3 January 2012
To Cassandra, from Rowling, "I have had my new gown made up, and it really makes a very superb surplice. I am sorry to say that my new coloured gown is very much washed out, though I charged everybody to take great care of it. I hope yours is so too." - Jane Austen, Thursday 1 September 1796

From what I can gather a surplice is a dress with a cross-over neckline.

Wit again, hoping Cassandra's dress would be just as washed out as hers.

Just for fun this is a link to a web site: Sensibility.com. This lady designs patterns for different era clothing. I have used her Simplicity pattern. I enjoyed making the dresses from it very much. I was actually able to make them fit. I bought the pattern to crochet the stole this morning while I was searching the world-wide-web for information about regency dresses. I will let you know how it comes along.

http://sensibility.com/patterns/the-elegant-ladys-closet/






This is an example of a crossover dress from one of her patterns.